Friday, September 21, 2018

Mt Pisgah Trail hike

We have been trying to make a hike on one of the mountain trails in the general area: within 40 miles or so. Yesterday we hike up the Mt Pisgah Trail.


We found the trail 'demanding' as one hiker that was on the way down said; "the last half mile is pretty demanding, but you have your sticks so you should be fine." We were fine and the last half was challenging for us older hikers. It started off looking like this and was equally beautiful all the way to the top.




And not only was it steep— 



it was. almost, all rocks:




I had the idea that at the top there would be a cleared space (and a porta potty) but nothing was cleared and only a 20' octantal was standing up in the brush. 


The view was specular and we sat for a bit, and a bite, and headed back down. I didn't take any photos from the top because, well, the ones i've taken from the top of other peaks never pleased me ... there is usually too much haze (yes i know LR can handle haze) and the view so vast, my little sensor just laughs at me trying to put that much territory onto an inch size piece of technology. So, no photographs of the top!


To add excitement to the journey back down, it began raining about half way down and we increased our pace. Thankfully, it stopped and waited until we were a few hundred yards from the car and then the skies opened up raining as hard as it often does in the mountains.

It was a good hike and about the outer limits of our abilities although we are noticing those abilities are increasing with the more we hike such trails.


Tuesday, August 21, 2018

More from the Porch

We are having an unusual amount of rain this August, or so i think as this is only my second August here ... still, its rained almost everyday for the past 10 days (i love it!) but its causing problems for those living along rivers' edges. Its raining as i write.

Season's end, for the Sunflower
And these were growing in the flower pot yesterday but are already gone.




From the Table

I was sitting at our dining room table earlier today, cleaning the sensor (actually, the cover of the sensor) and just as i put everything back together, a Goldfinch landed on the, mostly dead, sunflower on the back porch which i was facing.

The motivation for putting up the bird feeders, seen earlier in this blog, was the neighbors up the street have dozens of very large sunflowers in the yard and when we walk past there is often half a dozen Goldfinches eating ... so i put up bird feeders not really thinking about the Goldfinches but hoping for a variety of birds.

So when i looked up and there was a Goldfinch on the sunflower i picked up the camera, which had a 100mm lens on it which was o.k. at the distance i was from the sunflower, and took two photographs before it flew away. It is a delight that i know have a photograph of a Goldfinch on the sunflower:


So i thought i'd just photograph a few more items from where i sat —



The water under the tomatoes is from rain that rain on the sill 'fore we could get the window closed which was only 45 minutes earlier. I didn't notice we'd miss that water until i was about the photograph the tomatoes.

Also, the above photographs are files that are twice the size of the photographs i post; an experiment to see if that makes any difference in viewing them. When you click on them, are they any larger then the earlier photographs in this blog?

Saturday, July 28, 2018

More Feedings

I have moved all the feeders to the front of the house and now have 2 seed feeders, a hummer feeder and one suet.

While most of the birds are finches or sparrows, there is a mixture of other small and medium sized birds, most of which i look up on my handy bird books. Here are some of those birds:


Tufted Titmouse


Humming bird: Anna??


Female Juvie Cardinal



Carolina Chickadee


My favorite:
Goldfinch


There are at least two smallish birds that have flitted to and away from the feeders that i've not been able to photograph; if they don't sit for at least 10 sec, i'm not able to take a photograph. I'm hoping that over time i'll be able to photograph them.

And a final family photo:
Top, Tufted Titmouse, Mid: House Wren, Bot: Hairy Woodpecker 

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Mt. Airy - Mayberry, NC

During our travels from the coast to the mountains on our vacation, we stopped by a small town to get something to drink. Image our surprise when we discovered it was the home of the TV series Mayberry.






And the soda fountain where we bought an ice cream cone was called 'Barney's Cafe'. Sorry i didn't get a photograph of it. At that time we were sitting on a bench in front of the store rather puzzled at the old police car that kept circulating up and down the street ... so we began to look closer and discovered, yes we asked someone, that Mountain Airy was the shooting location of many of the Mayberry TV scenes. Surprises in the mountains on a hot July summer day!

More B&W




Tuesday, July 17, 2018

July travels —

Last week, we spent the week traveling along the Outer Banks to Cape Hatteras Lighthouse:

The largest lighthouse on the east coast, maybe in the US. It was moved about 2500 feet in the latter part of the 90's as the rising seawater was beginning to effect the base.


Looking at the center of the photo where the water washes onto the sand you can see the remains of an old wooden pier, or at least the dark line going into the water; behind that is a green turfed circle of sand and that is where the lighthouse use to sit. With hundreds of people's body and brains working, they figured out how to move the lighthouse in a straight line towards the camera. The parking was not there at the time. Look it up online, very interesting.

https://www.nps.gov/caha/learn/historyculture/movingthelighthouse.htm and there are some videos of the actual moving.

And it turns out that the man i met at Beaver Lake Dam here in Asheville is the photographer that took the photographs of the move - amazing, eh?

In Winston-Salem we spent the night as we made our way to Laurel Forks, VA, a mostly non-existent town on the west side of the Blue Ridge Parkway and as we were leaving W-S, S said, "go this way, i think there is a photographic opportunity up ahead."


Have you even seen anything like that? An old Shell station, that, i assume, was a working station at one time. There was no information at the site and it was closed and clearly well cared for.




  A week ago we drove to Bryson City where the Great Smoky Mountain Rail Road is located.  I heard about this mountain train ride some years...